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      The effects of testosterone and dihydrotestosterone on hypothalamic regulation of growth hormone secretion.

      The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
      Adolescent, Child, Dihydrotestosterone, therapeutic use, Double-Blind Method, Growth Disorders, drug therapy, metabolism, Growth Hormone, secretion, Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone, Humans, Hypothalamus, drug effects, physiopathology, Male, Pituitary Gland, Testosterone

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          Abstract

          Testosterone (T) administration to pubertal boys increases spontaneous GH secretion. It is not known whether this occurs via pituitary or hypothalamic mechanisms. We evaluated the GH secretion of 12 boys, aged 13.67 +/- 0.37 yr (mean +/- SE), diagnosed with constitutional delay in growth and adolescence. The evaluation was made both before and after 3 months of treatment with T or the nonaromatizable androgen, 5 alpha-dihydrotetosterone. Serum for determination of spontaneous GH secretion was sampled every 20 min for 24 h. Pituitary responsiveness was assessed by the administration of GHRH with sampling of GH at intervals for the next 2 h. This was also done with pyridostigmine (PDS) pretreatment to assess the effects of somatostatin. The dose of androgen used was 80 mg/m2 month. All tests were then repeated during treatment. Spontaneous GH secretion was analyzed by the Cluster method. The response to GHRH was measured as the area under the curve. Somatostatin effects were quantified as the difference in responsiveness between the two GHRH tests performed at each admission: one without prior PDS administration and one in which somatostatin was blocked by PDS. Treatment with T increased mean spontaneous GH secretion from 2.25 +/- 0.34 micrograms/L before treatment to 6.77 +/- 0.69 micrograms/L (mean +/- SE; P < 0.001) and mean spontaneous peak height from 5.62 +/- 1.05 to 17.21 +/- 1.52 micrograms/L (mean +/- SE; P < 0.001). No significant differences between pretreatment and treatment evaluations for any spontaneous GH secretory parameters were seen in 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone-treated patients, except that maximum peak height was decreased after treatment (P < 0.02). In T treated patients, the GHRH stimulation tests without prior PDS administration changed from 84.14 +/- 34.54 total micrograms/L before to 102.3 +/- 35.82 total micrograms/L (mean +/- SE; P = NS) after androgen treatment. PDS pretreatment produced an increase in responsiveness to GHRH over the test without PDS pretreatment. This increase was 127.03 +/- 35.68 total micrograms/L before T treatment; after T treatment, this increase was 78.38 +/- 57.6 total micrograms/L (mean +/- SE; P = NS). T treatment, via an estrogen-dependent mechanism, caused increased GH pulse amplitude, thereby increasing the mean serum GH concentration. This increase was not the result of increased pituitary responsiveness or decreased somatostatin tone. This indicates that T exerted its effect on GH via increased GHRH pulse amplitude.

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